![]() ![]() This is less than ideal for sure, since so many people who love Markdown will end up muddling through CSS. The colours are dark (perfect for me) but if you want something light you can dig in and write plain old CSS in Marxico’s settings to get that. When you choose the markdown-only view you get a nicely-centered column of text that seems just about right to me for writing. You have two view choices available - split view and markdown-only view. The writing interface for Marxico is pretty nice. I’d much rather see this in the app store, though then the developer would likely have to give Apple its cut of the Pro purchase. I admit to being a bit concerned about just downloading the desktop client from the developer’s Dropbox account. Marxico is available as a Chrome Extension, and desktop clients for Windows and Mac. Meaning, it becomes totally useless after those 10 days. During those 10 days you get the full Marxico experience with no limitations after 10 days you’re no longer able to sync notes. Marxico is a paid app/service that has a free 10-day trial. In my quest to find a decent way to work with Markdown in Evernote, I’ve already looked at Alternote, which was…okay, but only just barely. ![]()
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